The Landing Hotel

Rising Together: The Projects That Redefined Hampton Roads in 2025

By Eric S. Cavallo, Editor-in-Chief, HRCNN

Hampton Roads entered 2025 with expectations tempered by years of deferred projects, uneven investment cycles, and a regional economy often caught between aspiration and reality. Yet by the close of the year, the region presented a very different landscape—one marked by active construction, visible reinvestment, and a newfound alignment among its major cities. Virginia Beach, Norfolk, and Portsmouth each advanced projects of unusual scale and consequence, signaling that the region had moved past hesitancy and into a period of genuine economic confidence. The result was not a series of isolated developments but a portrait of a metropolitan area rediscovering its momentum.

Nowhere was this more apparent than at the Virginia Beach Oceanfront, where the long-anticipated Atlantic Park project finally moved decisively into construction. For years, the former Dome site stood as both a reminder of missed opportunity and a symbol of the city’s desire to create a modern entertainment district. That changed through the partnership between Venture Realty Group, the Virginia Beach Development Authority, Mayor Bobby Dyer, and key city leaders including Deputy City Manager Taylor Adams, who helped steer negotiations to final approval. The City of Virginia Beach committed more than $150 million toward the public backbone of the district: approximately $9.2 million for land acquisition and site preparation, $55 million for a new 3,500-seat entertainment venue, nearly $46 million for structured parking, about $36.6 million for off-site infrastructure, and an additional $6 million for streetscape improvements. Private capital is funding the remainder of a mixed-use program expected to total between $325 million and $350 million when fully built out. As 2025 progressed, foundations were poured, structural steel rose, and the once-vacant site transformed into a promising multi-venue district designed to reposition the Oceanfront as a year-round destination.

A few miles west, another Virginia Beach landmark continued its own transformation. The redevelopment of the former Pembroke Mall into Pembroke Square advanced throughout 2025 under the direction of Pembroke Realty Group and its president, Ramsay Smith. The $200 million plan represents one of the region’s most ambitious examples of adaptive reuse, replacing an aging enclosed mall with a walkable, integrated district of multifamily housing, senior living, hotel development, retail, dining, and entertainment. The city’s participation—particularly through public parking infrastructure—helped enable higher density and a more contemporary urban form. Aviva Pembroke, the senior living component, opened its doors; the Beamers residential building continued to stabilize with strong demand; and construction began on a seven-story Tempo by Hilton hotel, set to deliver in 2027. What emerged in 2025 was not merely the reinvention of a single parcel but a demonstration of how older commercial corridors can evolve into resilient, mixed-use urban centers capable of driving sustained economic activity.

Across the Elizabeth River in Norfolk, progress accelerated on a project of even greater scale. The Norfolk Casino Resort—led by the Pamunkey Indian Tribe in partnership with Boyd Gaming—advanced a $750 million entertainment and hospitality complex designed to reshape the city’s riverfront. Supported by Mayor Kenny Alexander and successive City Council actions, the resort is planned to include a hotel tower, gaming floor, dining and retail options, meeting and convention space, and direct integration with the waterfront. For decades, the land adjacent to Harbor Park remained underutilized despite its strategic location along transit, riverfront access, and the city’s sports district. In 2025, pile driving, site preparation, and foundation systems signaled that Norfolk had moved beyond conceptual renderings into tangible execution. The opening of a temporary casino later in the year provided further evidence that the long-term resort is not just aspirational but underway, with the potential to anchor a new era of downtown revitalization and tourism-oriented development.

Portsmouth, too, marked 2025 as a turning point. With the success of Rivers Casino Portsmouth already established, city leadership—including Mayor Shannon Glover, the City Manager’s Office, and partners at Rush Street Gaming—advanced The Landing Hotel, an eight-story, $65 million lodging development directly connected to the casino. Designed to include 106 guest rooms, 32 suites, and high-end amenities such as executive meeting spaces, upscale hospitality offerings, and indoor access to the casino’s entertainment and dining venues, The Landing stands to become one of the most consequential hospitality investments in Portsmouth’s modern history. Groundbreaking activity, early-stage structural work, and contractor mobilization reflected a project that had moved definitively from planning to execution. In a city constrained by its limited taxable land base—where federal and military holdings dominate large acreage—privately funded investments of this magnitude carry an outsized impact. The Landing is expected to generate hundreds of construction jobs, dozens of permanent hospitality positions, and sustained revenue streams that strengthen the city’s fiscal position.

Taken together, the progress made in 2025 represents more than concurrent construction activity. It reflects a strategic reorientation in how Hampton Roads cities evaluate, pursue, and execute large-scale development. Each project differs in purpose and design: Atlantic Park modernizes the region’s tourism identity; Pembroke Square demonstrates the power of urban reinvention; Norfolk’s casino resort reclaims underused waterfront; and The Landing elevates Portsmouth’s hospitality and entertainment capacity. Yet in their differences, they reveal a shared regional trajectory. Local governments made difficult but forward-looking financial commitments. Developers invested capital at a scale that signals faith in the metropolitan economy. And planners, architects, and contractors worked in alignment to bring long-discussed ideas into physical form.

As 2026 approaches, the question confronting Hampton Roads is no longer whether the region can attract major development, but how effectively it can integrate these investments into a cohesive, resilient, and prosperous future. The groundwork laid in 2025 suggests a region capable not only of competing with its peers but of defining itself through bold, coordinated action. With major projects rising in three core cities, Hampton Roads enters the next year not with speculation but with momentum—and with a construction landscape that stands as visible proof of its renewed confidence.

About HRCNN

The Hampton Roads Construction News Network provides independent, industry-focused reporting on infrastructure, development, zoning, and the built environment across southeastern Virginia. Our mission is to inform public understanding, elevate professional insight, and chronicle the projects that shape the region’s economic and civic future. Through analytical coverage and clear editorial standards, HRCNN documents not only what is being built, but why it matters—and how it defines the communities we call home.

The Landing Hotel: Rivers Casino Portsmouth Expands Its Footprint

By HRCNN Staff Writer, Hampton Roads Construction News Network (HRCNN)

PORTSMOUTH, Va. — Rivers Casino Portsmouth is moving forward with its most ambitious expansion yet: The Landing Hotel, an eight-story addition set to redefine the city’s entertainment and hospitality landscape.

Announced in May 2025 and backed by parent company Rush Street Gaming, the $65 million project is more than a hotel. It is the next stage in Portsmouth’s plan to anchor Victory Boulevard with a world-class entertainment district.

The Landing Hotel will feature 106 guest rooms, including 32 suites and two “super suites” offering more than 800 square feet. Plans also include a lobby reception, a ground-floor bar, and multiple executive boardrooms. Each element is designed to connect directly to the casino’s restaurants, gaming floor, and 25,000-square-foot Event Center.

Construction began in summer 2025, with completion expected in early 2027. In July, Rush Street Gaming selected Norfolk-based S.B. Ballard Construction Company as general contractor, ensuring the project would be led by a Hampton Roads firm with a record of managing complex commercial builds.

The project reflects years of groundwork. In 2020, Virginia’s General Assembly approved casino gaming in five cities. Portsmouth voters backed the measure that November, and Rivers Casino Portsmouth opened in January 2023 as the Commonwealth’s first permanent casino facility.

The Landing Hotel is the logical sequel. It will provide the overnight capacity needed to attract tourism dollars and strengthen Portsmouth’s competitive edge. That competition is pressing, as Norfolk advances its own permanent casino project and operates temporary facilities.

Rivers executives have said The Landing Hotel is both a hospitality upgrade and a strategic defense to maintain market share. Private financing underscores Rush Street Gaming’s confidence in Portsmouth’s entertainment economy, while avoiding public subsidy.

The hotel’s expanded meeting space and suites are designed to keep revenue on site, hosting concerts, conventions, and executive gatherings without losing visitors to hotels elsewhere in the region.

On November 29, 2025, the casino will showcase that vision when country music rising star Chase Matthew performs live at 8 p.m. in the Event Center. For guests, it will be a night of music. For developers, it will be proof of concept—the kind of programming The Landing Hotel is built to support when it opens in 2027.

About HRCNN
The Hampton Roads Construction News Network (HRCNN) provides accurate, builder-informed coverage of construction, zoning, and infrastructure across Coastal Virginia. Founded under Earthly Infrastructure®, HRCNN supports transparent decision-making, resilient infrastructure, and responsible growth.